Creation and development The role of Walter Skinner was played by actor
Mitch Pileggi, who had unsuccessfully
auditioned for two or three other
characters on
The X-Files before getting the part. At first, the fact that he was asked back to audition for the
recurring role slightly puzzled him, until he discovered the reason he had not previously been
cast in those roles —
Chris Carter had been unable to envision Pileggi as any of those characters, due to the fact that the actor had been shaving his head. When the actor had attended the audition for Walter Skinner, he had been in a grumpy
mood and had allowed his small amount of hair to grow back. Pileggi's attitude fit well with Walter Skinner's character, causing Carter to assume that the actor was only pretending to be grumpy. After successfully auditioning for the role, Pileggi thought he had been lucky that he had not been cast in one of the earlier roles, as he believed he would have appeared in only a single episode and would have missed the opportunity to play the recurring role of Walter Skinner. Pileggi himself thought he got the role because of
Gillian Anderson's (who portrayed
Dana Scully)
pregnancy during the
second season, saying the producers felt they needed to take the "show in a different direction" while she was pregnant. So Pileggi felt at the start that he "compensated" for the situation of the show, and after a while the character started to grow on the producers and fellow cast, as Pileggi puts it, "the character just started kind of clicking and working". At the end of the second season, the producers wanted Pileggi to return in future episodes, so he signed a six-year
contract with them. In an interview with
X-Files fan site host Robin Mayhall, Pileggi commented once that he felt
David Duchovny's (portrayed
Fox Mulder) semi-departure in
season eight and the introduction of
Robert Patrick's
John Doggett, and the fact that he started to believe in
Aliens at the end of
season seven, Skinner was given the "opportunity to grow", further stating "new avenues" had been opened. While Pileggi stated that he missed Duchovny's presence in
The X-Files, he continued saying that he did not have the opportunity to work with him during the seventh season. He even went as far as saying that there was no "interaction between" the two characters. He was positive to the new storyline conceived during Duchovny's departure, saying it gave the show a "shot in the arm," which reinvented the show.
I Want to Believe As writers Carter and
Frank Spotnitz aimed to avoid complicating the storyline of
The X-Files: I Want to Believe with superfluous appearances of characters from the
television series, Skinner is the only returning character in the movie. He was included in the film's plot only when a fitting opportunity to involve him arose, and Spotnitz and Carter were very happy to write Skinner into the story. The scenes of
The X-Files: I Want to Believe that include Skinner were filmed very late in the movie's filming schedule, and the particular scene that acts as the character's introduction in the movie was filmed, for reasons of time, in two different locations. == Reception ==